BRUSSELS (AP) — The Latest on Britain’s impending departure from the European Union (all times local):

8:00 p.m.

U.S. President Donald Trump has waded back into British politics, expressing enthusiasm for the likelihood of Boris Johnson becoming the U.K.’s next prime minister and panning outgoing leader Theresa May’s handling of Brexit.

Trump was asked about Johnson, a former London mayor and British foreign secretary, during a photo op with reporters in the Oval Office on Friday.

Johnson is considered the favorite to be declared the winner Tuesday of the Conservative Party election to replace May.

The president said: “I like Boris Johnson. Boris, I spoke to him yesterday. I think he’s going to do a great job. I think we’re going to have a great relationship.”

Trump repeated previous criticism of May concerning Britain’s departure from the European Union, which has been postponed.

He said: “I think they’ve done a very poor job with Brexit. I think the previous prime minister has done a very bad job with Brexit. What can I say? I mean it’s a disaster and it shouldn’t be that way. I think Boris will straighten it out.”

Trump had more praise for Johnson, saying they can relate to each other.

He said: “I like Boris Johnson. I always have. He’s a different kind of a guy but they say I’m a different kind of a guy, too. We get along well. I think we’ll have a very good relationship.”

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12:45 p.m.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel says she trusts that Britain will “find its way” on Brexit under a new prime minister, but isn’t saying whether she advocates a further delay to its exit from the European Union or a new referendum.

Merkel said at her annual summer news conference Friday in Berlin that a declaration on future relations between Britain and the EU could be refined. But she indicated no readiness to budge on the basic divorce deal that the British Parliament has rejected three times, saying “the withdrawal agreement is the withdrawal agreement.”

She also defended an arrangement intended to keep an open Irish border after Brexit, which both British leadership candidates want to ditch.

Asked whether she favors another British referendum on its EU membership, Merkel said she won’t interfere. She added: “I trust very firmly that Britain will find its way. It is a proud, great nation and it will remain our partner even if Britain is no longer a member of the European Union.”

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10 a.m.

British lawmakers were meeting with the European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator, seeking an iron-clad guarantee that the 1.3 million U.K. citizens in the bloc won’t have their rights removed and their lives disrupted if Britain leaves the EU without a deal.

The rights of U.K. citizens living in the 27 other EU nations, and of the more than 3 million EU citizens in Britain, are one of the thorniest issues of the Brexit negotiations.

Their rights to live, work and study are protected under an agreement struck between the two sides — but the divorce agreement has been rejected by Britain’s Parliament, raising the prospect of a no-deal Brexit.

The U.K. is due to leave the bloc on Oct. 31, and both men vying to take over as prime minister next week, Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt, say it’s imperative that Brexit happens, with or without a deal.